Tkachenko at the Moscow Olympics, 1980 | ||
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Women's Athletics | ||
Representing the Soviet Union | ||
Olympic Games | ||
1980 Moscow | Pentathlon | |
Universiade | ||
1973 Moscow | Pentathlon | |
European Championships | ||
1974 Rome | Pentathlon |
Nadiya Volodymyrivna Tkachenko (Ukrainian: Надія Володимирівна Ткаченко) or Nadezhda Vladimirovna Tkachenko (Russian: Надежда Владимировна Ткаченко) (born 19 September 1948) is a Ukrainian former pentathlete who won gold at the 1980 Olympics.[1][2] She was born in Kremenchuk, then in the Ukrainian SSR in the Soviet Union,[1] and took up pentathlon aged 18 training at the Vanguard Voluntary Sports Societies of the Soviet Union in Donetsk Oblast.[1][2] She came second in pentathlon in the Soviet championships of 1971 and 1972,[2] and competed three times for the Soviet Union at the Olympics.[1][2]
She set her first world record (4839 points) winning the 1977 European Cup.[1][3] She won the 1974 European title, but was stripped of the 1978 title after testing positive for anabolic steroids and given an 18-month ban.[4][5] In May 1980, just after the ban, she scored 4880 points, which was not ratified as a record because the races were hand timed.[6] In July she won the 1980 Olympic title with 5083 points,[1][7] becoming the only woman ever to break 5000 points outdoors,[n 1][1] with the final world record before the event was replaced in 1981 by the heptathlon.[1] The Soviet government awarded her the Order of the Red Banner of Labour and the title Honored Master of Sports of the USSR.[2]
Since retiring from competition she has worked as a youth sports coach in Donetsk, of which she was named an honorary citizen in 2005.[2] A youth athletics competition in the city is named after her.[2]
five athletes having participated in the European athletic championships in Prague and having had positive doping tests have been stripped of their awards and cannot participate in any athletics events for a minimum period of 18 months. The athletes in question are : Nadjada [sic] Tkachenko [etc.]
It was agreed to reinstate the following five athletes after a minimum period of 18 months from the date of the competition at which they infringed the IAAF doping rules at the European championships [... : ...] Nadyezhda Tkachenko [etc.]
Cite error: There are <ref group=n>
tags on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=n}}
template (see the help page).